2 Answers
2

Use a wired connection and boot into Safe Mode with Networking (tap F8 on startup for Advanced Boot Options, it will usually be the third option, after Repair Your Computer and Safe Mode).

This is an informative comparison point as Windows starts with only core drivers and services, and no third-party software.

If it works in safe mode with networking, it tells you there is something loading on normal boot that is interfering, which gives you two options.

Run Windows system restore and choose the latest known working date among the restore points (check if the restore point descriptions note anything unusual - anything besides "System scheduled checkpoint" could be informative). I would do this first, as it performs an entire registry rollback, and then go for the more granular option 2 if this fails.

Open msconfig and have a look at what services and programs are starting on a normal boot. In the services tab of msconfig, check "Hide all Microsoft services" at the bottom, then make a note of all remaining services and disable them. In the startup tab of msconfig, make a note of all the checked items and disable them. Reboot to normal mode. If everything works in normal mode after this, you need to go back into msconfig and selectively enable the important things, among these your security package. If it stops working after reenabling something and rebooting, you have found a culprit.

If it does not work in safe mode with networking, do option 1 above.

In my mind the primary suspects for the behavior you are describing would be malware, a hung security package or - possibly - a windows update gone bad. If you get it working, update your security package and do a full scan.

Check your browsers again and see if things are working now. If yes then your DNS server has some problems. You can keep using the Google DNS servers while fixing your own.

If it's still not working try using curl (Windows packages are at the bottom of the page) to see if it is a browser issue:

curl superuser.com

You should see the HTML source of this site. If this works then your browsers do something strange.

Another note, probably unrelated: Check if you have any strange proxy settings in your Internet Explorer connection settings. These settings are system-wide and may be the reason for (not DNS-specific) connection issues.

To set your primary DNS server back to DHCP type this as Administrator: